The folks at the Puget Sound Business Journal had a bird’s-eye view of the Alaskan Way Viaduct demolition this week, and photographer Marcus Donner documented the controversial roadway’s demise one picture at a time.

The journal’s offices are based in the downtown Norton Building, and that’s where Donner set up his camera. From the building’s 13th floor, he took a photo every two or three minutes for five days to make this video.

How do you make an AM radio broadcast more interesting? Perform it live at Town Hall, which is what several familiar Seattle voices plan Friday with a futuristic adaptation of Sleepy Hollow.

The local broadcast, written by Seattle historian and radio enthusiast Feliks Banel, is part of a national radio drama project that that all takes place at 8 p.m. Friday. Radio theater companies in Boston, Atlanta, Oklahoma are all doing adaptations of Washington’s Irving’s Sleepy Hollow story in addition to Seattle.

The Italian magazine that reported Raffaele Sollecito wants to see Amanda Knox soon fabricated the interview and published lies, according to ABC News.

An English translation of the interview in OGGI was recently published in the Daily Beast, quoting Sollecito as saying he wants to see Knox again and might visit Seattle before Christmas. (More on what the article said here: “Raffaele Sollecito: I want to see Amanda Knox again.”)

Sollecito’s father, Francesco Sollecito, told ABC no interview was granted to OGGI, and that the magazine made up lies and attributed them to his son.

Downward facing dog is good for your spine, but for your mental health? That might just be a bunch of hooey.

A study released this week and funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine found there’s no reason to believe yoga is healthy for the mind. That’s bound to rub some yogis the wrong way, especially after all those oms and sun salutations.